Multiple Types of Childhood and Adult Violence Among Homeless and Unstably Housed Women in San Francisco

1Department of Liberal Arts; St. Louis College of Pharmacy2Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco3Community Health Systems, School of Nursing, University of California, San Francisco4Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco

Checking for direct PDF access through Ovid

Abstract

This study examined the relationship between different forms of childhood violence (emotional, physical, and sexual) and these same forms of violence in adulthood, using a cross-sectional baseline survey of 298 homeless and unstably housed women in San Francisco, California. We also examined other related factors, including mental illnesses diagnosis, sex exchange, jail time, HIV status, and sociodemographic information. Regression analysis indicated that although several of these factors were associated with experiences of violence as an adult, specific types of child violence (e.g., sexual violence) predicted instances of that same type of violence as an adult but not necessarily other types. Thus, risk of adult violence among low-income women may be better predicted and addressed through histories of same-type childhood violence, despite years of intervening exposures and stressors.